3,942 research outputs found
En el segundo centenario de la inauguración del JardÃn Botánico de México
On 1st May 1788, the Botanic Garden was inaugurated in Mexico City on Martin de Sesse's initiative. He was the Leader of the Scientific Expedition to Nueva España, under the auspices of King Charles III and in cIose contac with the Royal Botanic Garden in Madrid, directed by Casimiro Gómez Ortega, who helped him from the mother country, This work studies the history of this, Garden, which helped the medical students of Mexico in their studies and experiments, and also the hospitals of the city and the studious of the medicine in Nueva España.El 1 de Mayo de 1788 fue inaugurado en la ciudad de México el JardÃn Botánico a iniciativa de MartÃn de Sessé, director de la Expedición CientÃfica a Nueva España, patrocinada por Carlos III y en estrecho contacto con el Real JardÃn Botánico de Madrid, dirigido por Casimiro Gómez Ortega, que impulsó la empresa desde la metrópoli. Dicho centro, de cuya historia se trata en este trabajo, sirvió de estudio y experimentación a los estudiantes de la Facultad de Medicina de México, a los Hospitales de esta ciudad y a todos los interesados en la Materia Médica de Nueva España
Fuentes para el conocimiento de los usos y prácticas medicinales en nueva España en el siglo XVI
The relationship is established between the content of chapter XXVIII of Book X, of the "Historia General de las Cosas de Nueva España" by Fray Bemardino de Sahagún where the uses and applications of several drugs of both vegetal and animal origin by indigenouses and the text of Francisco Hemández "Historia Natural de Nueva España" , where these drugs are described in detail using the same denominations and indicating their main applications. These words serve as a connexion between the two texts, which represent toguether with other indian codes, an important contribution to the knowledge about the use, applications and skill of mexican medicine at the time of the Spanish arrival in this country.Se establece la relación que existe entre el contenido de parte del capÃtulo XXVIII, del Libro X, de la obra "Historia General de las Cosas de Nueva España", de Bemardino de Sahagún, donde se expone el uso y aplicaciones por parte de los indÃgenas de diversas drogas, tanto de origen vegetal como animal, y el texto de la obra de Francisco Hemández "Historia Natural de Nueva España", donde estas drogas, que tienen las mismas denominaciones en nahuatl, son ampliamente descritas, indicándose sus principales aplicaciones. Estos nombres sirven de nexo para la interpretación de ambos textos que representan, junto con determinados Códices indÃgenas, importantes aportaciones al conocimiento del uso, aplicaciones y virtudes medicinales de la Materia Médica mexicana en la época de la llegada de los españoles a este paÃs
En el segundo centenario de la inauguración del JardÃn Botánico de México
El 1 de Mayo de 1788 fue inaugurado en la ciudad de México el JardÃn Botánico a iniciativa de MartÃn de Sessé, director de la Expedición CientÃfica a Nueva España, patrocinada por Carlos III y en estrecho contacto con el Real JardÃn Botánico de Madrid, dirigido por Casimiro Gómez Ortega, que impulsó la empresa desde la metrópoli. Dicho centro, de cuya historia se trata en este trabajo, sirvió de estudio y experimentación a los estudiantes de la Facultad de Medicina de México, a los Hospitales de esta ciudad y a todos los interesados en la Materia Médica de Nueva España.On 1st May 1788, the Botanic Garden was inaugurated in Mexico City on
Martin de Sesse's initiative. He was the Leader of the Scientific Expedition to
Nueva España, under the auspices of King Charles III and in cIose contac with
the Royal Botanic Garden in Madrid, directed by Casimiro Gómez Ortega,
who helped him from the mother country, This work studies the history of this ,
Garden, which helped the medical students of Mexico in their studies and experiments, and also the hospitals of the city and the studious of the medicine
in Nueva España
Finite size effects in Neutron Star and Nuclear matter simulations
In this work we study molecular dynamics simulations of symmetric nuclear
matter using a semi-classical nucleon interaction model. We show that, at
sub-saturation densities and low temperatures, the solutions are
non-homogeneous structures reminiscent of the ``nuclear pasta'' phases expected
in Neutron Star Matter simulations, but shaped by artificial aspects of the
simulations. We explore different geometries for the periodic boundary
conditions imposed on the simulation cell: cube, hexagonal prism and truncated
octahedron. We find that different cells may yield different solutions for the
same physical conditions (i.e. density and temperature). The particular shape
of the solution at a given density can be predicted analytically by energy
minimization. We also show that even if this behavior is due to finite size
effects, it does not mean that it vanishes for very large systems and it
actually is independent of the system size: The system size sets the only
characteristic length scale for the inhomogeneities.
We then include a screened Coulomb interaction, as a model of Neutron Star
Matter, and perform simulations in the three cell geometries. In this case, the
competition between competing interactions of different range produces the well
known nuclear pasta, with (in most cases) several structures per cell. However,
we find that the results are affected by finite size in different ways
depending on the geometry of the cell. In particular, at the same physical
conditions and system size, the hexagonal prism yields a single structure per
cell while the cubic and truncated octahedron show consistent results with more
than one structure per cell. In this case, the results in every cell are
expected to converge for systems much larger than the characteristic length
scale that arises from the competing interactions.Comment: 17 pages, 10 figure
Isoscaling and the nuclear EOS
Experiments with rare isotopes are shedding light on the role isospin plays
in the equation of state (EoS) of nuclear matter, and isoscaling -an
straight-forward comparison of reactions with different isospin- could deliver
valuable information about it. In this work we test this assertion
pragmatically by comparing molecular dynamics simulations of isoscaling
reactions using different equations of state and looking for changes in the
isoscaling parameters; to explore the possibility of isoscaling carrying
information from the hot-and-dense stage of the reaction, we perform our study
in confined and expanding systems. Our results indicate that indeed isoscaling
can help us learn about the nuclear EoS, but only in some range of excitation
energies
The Specification Property for -Semigroups
We study one of the strongest versions of chaos for continuous dynamical
systems, namely the specification property. We extend the definition of
specification property for operators on a Banach space to strongly continuous
one-parameter semigroups of operators, that is, -semigroups. In addition,
we study the relationships of the specification property for -semigroups
(SgSP) with other dynamical properties: mixing, Devaney's chaos, distributional
chaos and frequent hypercyclicity. Concerning the applications, we provide
several examples of semigroups which exhibit the SgSP with particular interest
on solution semigroups to certain linear PDEs, which range from the hyperbolic
heat equation to the Black-Scholes equation.Comment: 13 page
The first INTEGRAL-OMC catalogue of optically variable sources
The Optical Monitoring Camera (OMC) onboard INTEGRAL provides photometry in
the Johnson V-band. With an aperture of 50 mm and a field of view of 5deg x
5deg, OMC is able to detect optical sources brighter than V~18, from a
previously selected list of potential targets of interest. After more than nine
years of observations, the OMC database contains light curves for more than
70000 sources (with more than 50 photometric points each). The objectives of
this work have been to characterize the potential variability of the objects
monitored by OMC, to identify periodic sources and to compute their periods,
taking advantage of the stability and long monitoring time of the OMC. To
detect potential variability, we have performed a chi-squared test, finding
5263 variable sources out of an initial sample of 6071 objects with good
photometric quality and more than 300 data points each. We have studied the
periodicity of these sources using a method based on the phase dispersion
minimization technique, optimized to handle light curves with very different
shapes.In this first catalogue of variable sources observed by OMC, we provide
for each object the median of the visual magnitude, the magnitude at maximum
and minimum brightness in the light curve during the window of observations,
the period, when found, as well as the complete intrinsic and period-folded
light curves, together with some additional ancillary data.Comment: Accepted by Astronomy & Astrophysics; 13 pages, 16 figures. Figures'
resolution has been degraded to fit astro-ph constraint
- …